For Glee's Lea Michele, A Nose is a Nose is a Nose is a Nose

by Amanda Walgrove Last week's episode of Glee preached the self-acceptance of mother monster Lady Gaga's single, "Born This Way." Creators Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk used the hour-and-a-half special to cram in as many subplots as possible, advocating various avenues of self-love in coming to terms with sexuality, OCD, and physical imperfections. Revisiting a recurring reference of the show, Rachel Berry (played by Lea Michele) finds herself struggling with the option of rhinoplasty, even though her idol, Barbra Streisand, refused to go under the knife. The bossy, ambitious, and charmingly vulnerable Rachel gets served her own "Marsha Marsha Marsha" moment when she receives an accidental blow to the nose during a dance practice. Considering her deviated septum, a doctor suggests that it would be a good time for a "vanity adjustment." Donning an impressive schnoz of...

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For Glee’s Lea Michele, A Nose is a Nose is a Nose is a Nose

by Amanda Walgrove Last week's episode of Glee preached the self-acceptance of mother monster Lady Gaga's single, "Born This Way." Creators Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk used the hour-and-a-half special to cram in as many subplots as possible, advocating various avenues of self-love in coming to terms with sexuality, OCD, and physical imperfections. Revisiting a recurring reference of the show, Rachel Berry (played by Lea Michele) finds herself struggling with the option of rhinoplasty, even though her idol, Barbra Streisand, refused to go under the knife. The bossy, ambitious, and charmingly vulnerable Rachel gets served her own "Marsha Marsha Marsha" moment when she receives an accidental blow to the nose during a dance practice. Considering her deviated septum, a doctor suggests that it would be a good time for a "vanity adjustment." Donning an impressive schnoz of...

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Good Jewish Fun

By Symi Rom-Rymer With weather in the 90s and a three-day weekend to look forward to, it’s no time for a heavy post.  So instead, here’s some fun Jewish TV mind candy: I thought I’d kick things off with a sketch from the early years, “Jewess Jeans.”  A parody of the then-popular Jordache jeans commercial, Rhonda Weiss (played by Gilda Radner) skillfully plays with our notions of what it means to be both Jewish and sexy. One of my strongest memories of Hebrew School is watching the Bar Mitzvah episode of The Wonder Years.  Ever year at some point, our teachers would trot this out as a clean, satire-free look at Jews on TV.  Sometimes I wonder if they also wanted to use this episode as warning:  if you stray from the fold, you will end up like...

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